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Professor Peter Greste
Professor

Peter Greste

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Overview

Background

Professor Peter Greste is an award-winning foreign correspondent who spent 25 years working for the BBC, Reuters and Al Jazeera in some of the world’s most volatile places. From Afghanistan, to Latin American, Africa and the Middle East, he reported from the frontlines and beyond, although he is best known for becoming a headline himself, when he and two of his colleagues were arrested in Cairo while working for Al Jazeera, and charged with terrorism offences. In letters smuggled from prison, he described the arrests as an attack on media freedom. The letters helped launch a global campaign that eventually got them released after more than 400 days in prison. He has since become a vocal campaigner and advocate for media freedom – a stance that has earned him awards from Britain’s Royal Television Society, the Walkley Foundation, the RSL’s ANZAC Peace Prize, the Australian Human Rights Commission’s Human Rights Medal, and the International Association of Press Clubs’ Freedom of Speech Award. He has written about his experiences in Egypt and what he regards as the global war on journalism in a book, The First Casualty.

Availability

Professor Peter Greste is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Business Communication, Institution to be confirmed

Works

Search Professor Peter Greste’s works on UQ eSpace

15 works between 2017 and 2025

1 - 15 of 15 works

2025

Journal Article

Foreign Interference and the Incremental Chilling of Free Speech

Sorial, Sarah, Morris, Shireen and Greste, Peter (2025). Foreign Interference and the Incremental Chilling of Free Speech. Federal Law Review, 52 (1), 103-127. doi: 10.1177/0067205x241235983

Foreign Interference and the Incremental Chilling of Free Speech

2023

Book Chapter

Media and national security

Greste, Peter (2023). Media and national security. The Media and Communications in Australia. (pp. 274-278) London, United Kingdom: Routledge. doi: 10.4324/9781003280644-26

Media and national security

2023

Journal Article

Defining journalism: how a new approach to a definition could revolutionize media freedom

Greste, Peter (2023). Defining journalism: how a new approach to a definition could revolutionize media freedom. Australian Journalism Review, 45 (1), 27-36. doi: 10.1386/ajr_00116_7

Defining journalism: how a new approach to a definition could revolutionize media freedom

2023

Book Chapter

Journalism and ethics amid the Infodemic

Greste, Peter (2023). Journalism and ethics amid the Infodemic. CSR Communication in the media: media management on sustainability at a global level. (pp. 211-221) edited by Franzisca Weder, Lars Rademacher and René Schmidpeter. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-18976-0_15

Journalism and ethics amid the Infodemic

2022

Conference Publication

Breaking the law: How Australian journalists and the organisations they work for have reacted to meta-data retention laws

Murray, Richard and Greste, Peter (2022). Breaking the law: How Australian journalists and the organisations they work for have reacted to meta-data retention laws. Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia Conference 2022: Journalism in Post-Normal Times, Perth, WA Australia, 4-6 December, 2022.

Breaking the law: How Australian journalists and the organisations they work for have reacted to meta-data retention laws

2021

Journal Article

In the public interest: protections and risks in whistleblowing to the media

Ananian-Welsh, Rebecca, Cronin, Rose and Greste, Peter (2021). In the public interest: protections and risks in whistleblowing to the media. University of New South Wales Law Journal, 44 (4), 1242-1280. doi: 10.53637/WMZR2175

In the public interest: protections and risks in whistleblowing to the media

2021

Book Chapter

Journalism on Ice - National Security Laws and The Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism

Murray, Richard, Ananian-Welsh, Rebecca and Greste, Peter (2021). Journalism on Ice - National Security Laws and The Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism. Counter-Terrorism Laws and Freedom of Expression: Global Perspectives. (pp. 295-317) edited by Workneh, Tewodros and Haridakis, Paul. Lanham, MD United States: Lexington Books.

Journalism on Ice - National Security Laws and The Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism

2021

Conference Publication

Journalism on Ice: National Security Laws and the Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism

Murray, Richard, Ananian-Welsh, Rebecca and Greste, Peter (2021). Journalism on Ice: National Security Laws and the Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism. International Communication Association Conference: Engaging the Essential Work of Care: Communication, Connectedness, and Social Justice, Denver, CO United States, 27-31 May 2021.

Journalism on Ice: National Security Laws and the Chilling Effect in Australian Journalism

2021

Other Outputs

Facebook power move: What did a news ban achieve and what will a new bargaining code mean for Australia's media landscape?

Greste, Peter, Cronin, Danielle, Carah, Nicholas, Kelly, Sarah and Jedlickova, Barbora (2021, 02 26). Facebook power move: What did a news ban achieve and what will a new bargaining code mean for Australia's media landscape? Contact magazine

Facebook power move: What did a news ban achieve and what will a new bargaining code mean for Australia's media landscape?

2021

Journal Article

Slippery beasts: why academic freedom and media freedom are so difficult to protect

D'Agostino, Fred and Greste, Peter (2021). Slippery beasts: why academic freedom and media freedom are so difficult to protect. Australian Universities' Review, 63 (1), 45-52.

Slippery beasts: why academic freedom and media freedom are so difficult to protect

2020

Journal Article

The Future Foreign Correspondent, Saba Bebawi and Mark Evans (2019)

Greste, Peter (2020). The Future Foreign Correspondent, Saba Bebawi and Mark Evans (2019). Australian Journalism Review, 42 (1), 137-138. doi: 10.1386/ajr_00028_5

The Future Foreign Correspondent, Saba Bebawi and Mark Evans (2019)

2019

Journal Article

Why Australia needs a Media Freedom Act

Greste, Peter and Murray, Richard (2019). Why Australia needs a Media Freedom Act. The Political Economy of Communication, 7 (2), 105-108.

Why Australia needs a Media Freedom Act

2019

Conference Publication

The law or the lawyers: understanding the of legal counsel and advisors in Australian editorial processes

Murray, Richard , Ananian-Welsh, Rebecca and Greste, Peter (2019). The law or the lawyers: understanding the of legal counsel and advisors in Australian editorial processes. The Journalism Education and Research Association of Australia: Plurality, Precarity and Possibilities, Sydney, NSW Australia, 3-6 December 2019.

The law or the lawyers: understanding the of legal counsel and advisors in Australian editorial processes

2018

Journal Article

Why there is no culture of journalists’ safety

Greste, Peter (2018). Why there is no culture of journalists’ safety. Australian Journalism Review, 40 (2), 9-14.

Why there is no culture of journalists’ safety

2017

Book

The first casualty

Greste, Peter (2017). The first casualty. Sydney, Australia: Viking.

The first casualty

Supervision

Availability

Professor Peter Greste is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Media

Enquiries

Contact Professor Peter Greste directly for media enquiries about:

  • current affairs
  • free speech
  • journalism
  • journalist safety
  • media
  • news
  • press freedom

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